Sunday, March 05, 2006

Oscar Countdown

Our next Best Picture nominee is Good Night And Good Luck.



This movie takes us back to the 1950s, a time when right-wing demagogues used fear and intimidation to drive the nation's press agenda - in other words, just like now but in black and white. Fortunately for all of us, one man wasn't having it: the legendary CBS newsman Edward R. Murrow, who created such a high standard for TV journalism that no broadcaster since has dared live up to it out of respect to his memory. Murrow's lonely, courageous battle against "the Red Scare" is an example to us all, though not so much the part where he chain-smokes unfiltered cigarettes. Still, a generation will always remember his integrity as well as his legendary sign-off, "Seacrest out."

David Strathairn is excellent as Murrow. He is so dull, grey, dour and devoid of expression that we actually believe he has been dead for forty years. But the real find here is the actor who portrays Senator Joseph McCarthy. I didn't stick around long enough to catch his name in the credits and I don't see him on the Oscar ballot but whoever he is, he is really good. Scary good, in fact - I found everything he said very convincing. If this guy wants to get out of the movie biz and start a political career, it's his. Let's just hope he's one of the good guys and not another Schwarzenegger.

Good Night was directed and co-written by George Clooney, who also co-stars and bankrolled this modest production off his Facts of Life residual checks. While the film's message is entirely relevant to our time, the b&w cinematography and jazz soundtrack is a nice throwback to the age of Eisenhower, I Love Lucy and principled reporters.

So cheers to Good Night And Good Luck - the Best Picture of the Year!

Now vote for your Best Picture:

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